Pema
Pema (Tibetan: པད་མ or པདྨ; Wylie: pad ma) is a Tibetan name meaning "lotus", which originated as a loanword from Sanskrit padma.[1][2] People who have this name as one of their given names[3] include:
Buddhist teachers and leaders
    
- Pema Lingpa (1450–1521), Bhutanese saint
 - Pema Rigdzin, 1st Dzogchen Rinpoche (1625–1697), first Dzogchen Rinpoche of Tibet
 - Nyala Pema Dündul (1816–1872), teacher of Dzogchen and Tantric Buddhism in Eastern Tibet
 - Pema Trinle (1874–1950), teacher of the Sakya tradition
 - Gomchen Pema Chewang Tamang (1918–1966), Sikkimese Buddhist scholar
 - Pema Chödrön (born Deirdre Blomfield-Brown, 1936), American nun
 - Pema Tönyö Nyinje (born 1954), the 12th Tai Situpa
 - Jigmet Pema Wangchen (born 1963), the 12th Gyalwang Drukpa
 
Royalty
    
- Tsundue Pema Lhamo (1886–1922), first queen consort of Bhutan
 - Pema Dechen (1918–1991), third queen consort of Bhutan
 - Jetsun Pema (born 1990), queen consort of Bhutan since 2011
 
Sportspeople
    
- Pema Tshering (born 1951), Bhutanese archer
 - Pema Chophel (born 1981), Bhutanese footballer
 - Pema Dorji (footballer) (born 1985), Bhutanese footballer
 - Pema Rinchen (born 1986), Bhutanese footballer
 - Pema Diki Sherpa (born 1988), Nepalese mountain climber
 
Other
    
- Pema Dorji (doctor) (1936–2009), practitioner of traditional Bhutanese medicine
 - Jetsun Pema (born 1940), sister of the 14th Dalai Lama
 - Pema Dhondup (fl. 1940s–present), Nepalese film director
 - Pema Gyamtsho (born 1961), Bhutanese politician
 - Pema Tseden (born 1969), Chinese film director
 - Pema Dakpa (born c. 1969), Bhutanese politician
 - Pema Khandu (born 1979), Indian politician, Chief Minister of Arunachal Pradesh
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- Tucci, Giuseppe (1988). The Religions of Tibet. University of California Press. p. 319. ISBN 9780520063488.
 - Gayley, Holly (2016). Love Letters from Golok: A Tantric Couple in Modern Tibet. Columbia University Press. p. 290. ISBN 9780231542753.
 - Note that Tibetan names generally do not have surnames. See e.g. Childs, Geoff (2004). Tibetan Diary: From Birth to Death and Beyond in a Himalayan Valley of Nepal. University of California Press. p. 6. ISBN 9780520241336.
 
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